Difference between revisions of "Road of Lilith"

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[[The Roads]]
 
[[The Roads]]
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''Nickname'':  '''Bahari''' or '''Lilin'''
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The first woman was not Eve.  Eve was a submissive, pure, behaved creation, designed to satisfy Adam's arrogance and to indulge his foolishness.  The first woman was Lilith.  She demanded knowledge and equality and was cast from the Garden of Eden for that sin.
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It was in her long years of wandering that she found Samael, the Lightbringer Angel.  He too was fallen.  Lilith gave him her flesh and her love and he gave her knowledge.  At least, that's how some tell it.  Others say he raped her and she stole magic from him in revenge.  The details do not matter, only the result: Lilith was pregnant and she had learned the power of angels.
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God sent the angels Senoy, Sansenoy and Semaneloff (Snvi, Snsvi and Smnglv) to subdue Lilith and drag her back to servitude in the Garden.  Her first children claimed that the three angels raped and abused her and put a curse upon her.  If anyone carved the names of those three angels on an amulet and held it to her or her children and shouted, "Out Lilith," she (and her children) would be powerless and would have to flee.  Lilith, betrayed again, bleeding and wounded, gave birth to the angels' children.
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In later years, she met Caine, the son of Adam, wandering in the Land of Nod.  She took him in, clothed him and taught him the secrets she had gathered from Samael, from the angels, from the demons that she had taken as her lovers, and from the wild ones who had sheltered her when she gave birth.  Perhaps she loved Caine.  He too bore a curse, an exile from God akin to her own.  Caine, too, betrayed her.

Revision as of 21:28, 2 May 2014

The Roads

Nickname: Bahari or Lilin

The first woman was not Eve. Eve was a submissive, pure, behaved creation, designed to satisfy Adam's arrogance and to indulge his foolishness. The first woman was Lilith. She demanded knowledge and equality and was cast from the Garden of Eden for that sin.

It was in her long years of wandering that she found Samael, the Lightbringer Angel. He too was fallen. Lilith gave him her flesh and her love and he gave her knowledge. At least, that's how some tell it. Others say he raped her and she stole magic from him in revenge. The details do not matter, only the result: Lilith was pregnant and she had learned the power of angels.

God sent the angels Senoy, Sansenoy and Semaneloff (Snvi, Snsvi and Smnglv) to subdue Lilith and drag her back to servitude in the Garden. Her first children claimed that the three angels raped and abused her and put a curse upon her. If anyone carved the names of those three angels on an amulet and held it to her or her children and shouted, "Out Lilith," she (and her children) would be powerless and would have to flee. Lilith, betrayed again, bleeding and wounded, gave birth to the angels' children.

In later years, she met Caine, the son of Adam, wandering in the Land of Nod. She took him in, clothed him and taught him the secrets she had gathered from Samael, from the angels, from the demons that she had taken as her lovers, and from the wild ones who had sheltered her when she gave birth. Perhaps she loved Caine. He too bore a curse, an exile from God akin to her own. Caine, too, betrayed her.